If a body is moving with uniform velocity, the net force acting on it is zero. This is in accordance with Newton's first law of motion, which states that an object will remain at rest or in uniform motion unless acted upon by a net external force.
A body in uniform motion has no net force acting on it. That means that either there are no forces at all, or else that all the forces acting on it add up to zero.
Objects moving at constant speed in a straight line are said to be in equilibrium. That is there is no force acting on them. If a force was acting there would be aceleration and the velocity would change.
A body moving with uniform velocity is in equilibrium when it moves with uniform velocity as no acceleration i.e. no net force acts on the body.The sum of all forces must be zero in this case. (To avoid rotation, the sum of all torques must also be zero).
An object will remain at rest if the net force acting on it is zero. An object will continue to move at a constant velocity if the net force acting on it is zero and there is no external force to change its velocity.
In order for an object to travel with constant velocity the sum of forces acting on it must be zero
A body in uniform motion has no net force acting on it. That means that either there are no forces at all, or else that all the forces acting on it add up to zero.
Objects moving at constant speed in a straight line are said to be in equilibrium. That is there is no force acting on them. If a force was acting there would be aceleration and the velocity would change.
A body moving with uniform velocity is in equilibrium when it moves with uniform velocity as no acceleration i.e. no net force acts on the body.The sum of all forces must be zero in this case. (To avoid rotation, the sum of all torques must also be zero).
An object will remain at rest if the net force acting on it is zero. An object will continue to move at a constant velocity if the net force acting on it is zero and there is no external force to change its velocity.
In order for an object to travel with constant velocity the sum of forces acting on it must be zero
No force is acting on it. Constant velocity means no acceleration, which means no force, from f=ma, no 'a' no force.
If an object is moving with constant velocity, then the net force acting on it is zero. This means that the forces acting on the object are balanced, resulting in no acceleration and a constant velocity.
If the force acting upon an object are balanced then the object must not be accelerating
The body is not zero, but the sum of all forces on it is. -- "Uniform velocity" means no acceleration. -- Acceleration is force/mass . -- If acceleration is zero, that's an indication that force must be zero.
An object moves with constant velocity when there is no net force acting upon it. If there are no forces acting on an object, or if the forces acting on it "cancel out" leaving a net force of zero acting on the object, it will have zero acceleration. With a zero acceleration, the velocity of the object will be constant.
If the object is moving in a straight line, then the net force on it is zero. If the object is not moving in a straight path, then there is some non-zero net force acting on it even if its speed is constant. We don't have enough information to describe the magnitude or direction of the force.
It is not "in spite of" it is because of. The action of the object (e.g. thrust of engine, waving of arms or legs) generates an oppositely directed reaction, causing the object to move in the other direction.